The Chinese now Competing on La Place Vendôme!

 

 

 

Qeelin Chinese luxury jewellery brand Pandas
Qeelin jewellery pandas; qeelin.com

By Philippe Mihailovich & Caroline Taylor

Paris Haute Joaillerie (High Jewellery) Week is attached to the Haute Couture Fashion Week so that high-end fashion clients visiting Paris can be tempted to purchase gorgeous jewellery to complement their dresses or vice versa. This year’s Fall/Winter 19/20 shows began on the 30th June so by the 1st July the likes of Boucheron, Chanel Joaillerie, Chaumet, Louis Vuitton Joaillerie, Anna Hu and Mikimoto opened their exhibitions for press and EIPs from one to four days on the official calendar. The Haute Joaillerie presentations are almost always held at the Place Vendôme.

One of the original reasons for the fame of this prestigious ‘place’ was due to the famous aristocrats who lived on the place. Positioned strategically between the Tuileries Gardens and Opera Garnier, the wealthy elite would regularly stroll by. The famed Ritz was the first hotel on the place and has historically attracted the super-wealthy and influential from all over the world and still does. Mademoiselle Chanel lived there until the end of her life.

Fréderic Boucheron was the first to seize the opportunity in 1893 to relocate his business from the arcades of the Palais Royal nearby to become the first jewellery ‘maison’ on the Place Vendôme and competitors soon followed. To be a jewellery brand on the Place today partly states that the house is able to produce high jewellery but also implies that it aims to set the standards for the world.

This particular fashion week was a Kering Group special. Not only was it a great time to open the doors of their refurbished Boucheron maison – which includes a private apartment for guests to rent that has a bath overlooking the Place – it also allows the house to deepen its links to Ritz. It is the Ritz, in fact, that services the space. Boucheron has also Chinese-ified the house by restoring a little Chinese “styled” room and now even dresses staff in what seems to be a Westernised interpretation of the Mandarin gown, also known as Qipao or Cheongsam.

qeelin place vendome paris boutique opening 2019
@qeelin.com

A few hundred meters away, a few steps from the Chanel Joaillerie maison, Kering also used this fashion week to officially open its Gucci High Jewellery boutique. This move follows the trend of strong fashion brands such as Dior and Chanel entering the Place Vendôme using their well-established fashion universes to challenge the old established jewellery houses that are better known for their product creations than for their brand universes. However, unlike Chanel and Dior who employed expert high jewellery designers to enter this field with legitimacy, Gucci’s jewellery designer is their fashion designer, Alessandro Michele, who was notably not at this low key opening.

Right next door to Boucheron was the long-awaited opening of Kering Group’s Qeelin brand claiming to be “The First Chinese Jeweller Boutique to open on the Place Vendôme”. Indeed it is, although a few hundred meters away, in the same street across the road, one can find the recently formed Chinese high jewellery house, TTF that only opened its doors this time last year – but technically the street name is not the same.

Qeelin can certainly claim to be the first Chinese ‘luxury’ jewellery brand to have opened in Paris having initially presented itself at the prestigious Crillon Hotel and then at the iconic fashion concept store, Colette followed at by a corner Galeries Lafayette. Then, just as sister house Boucheron had done in the 19th century, the brand opened its first stand-alone boutique at the prestigious Palais Royal in 2007 –- but this secretive luxury shopping area is not one that many tourists, especially American and Chinese tourists, are aware of. Place Vendôme will clearly boost the brand’s visibility with both Western and Chinese tourists alike.

Qeelin Chinese luxury jewellery brand window 2019
@qeelin.com
Qeelin Chinese luxury jewellery brand 2019-04
@qeelin.com

Should the World’s great European Maisons of the Place Vendôme be worried? To some extent, yes.

Qeelin is clearly a brilliant jewellery marketing and design concept with a product range created to appeal primarily to the Chinese. The same can be said for TTF. Whilst TTF has traditionally focused on Chinese New Year collections and Jadeite – things that Westerners care little about, Qeelin focuses on cutesy things and charms linked to Chinese heritage that are not sure to also win over western shoppers although some, such as the Panda/Teddy Bear, clearly can.

Having said that, what would be the situation of the Parisian luxury houses be today if they were not attracting Chinese customers? So yes, these houses should be worried because the new generation of Chinese shoppers are proud to buy Chinese brands – especially if they see their brands competing against the best in Paris at the best locations in Paris! The Chinese are travelling more frequently than ever and as Qeelin aims to represent the Chinese heart & culture, the challenge to Western brands is huge.

On top of which, Qeelin now has Sandra Ma, a famous actress in mainland China, as the face of their brand. Chinese actresses are not a new strategic move for the brand, they are part of its DNA. In fact, Qeelin first made headlines when the popular actress Maggie Cheung wore its Wulu ‘lucky charm’ while receiving the Gold Palm Award for “Best Actress” at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival. Qeelin is now famous for recurrent motifs like ‘Wulu’, a sort of enlarged figure 8, a symbol of good fortune in China, as well as the little pandas called ‘BoBo’ and ‘haha’ panda.

The brand has a contemporary design positioning, cleverly drawing inspiration from Chinese ideograms and symbols that are loaded with meaning that have not as yet been exploited by other brands. Qeelin was conceptualised and founded in 2004 by industrial designer and artistic director Dennis Chan (interviewed above) and French businessman Guillaume Brochard, who then left the business in 2015.

Not only is Chan a brilliant international award-winning designer that has lived and worked in Hong Kong and London, his designs have been exhibited at the Louvre in Paris and the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Like the great Karl Lagerfeld, Chan is focused on creating icons and iconic concepts and is succeeding in doing so. Already in the brand name we find a clever hidden link to his name – its part of his Chinese name as well as carrying a strong Chinese meaning, that of the Qilin- a legendary Chinese gourd, an auspicious Chinese mythical animal and an icon of love.

It all began on a trip that Hong Kong-born Chan did in 1997 following the footsteps of the legendary Marco Polo to the Buddhist Mogao Caves in Dunhuang – a former checkpoint on the Silk Road – seven hundred years ago when China was way ahead of the world in producing luxury goods and even in reading and writing. “At that time, European travellers who endeavoured to discover the East were awe-struck by the grandeur of China: its art, its crafts, its literature and its civilization,” explains Chan. In our video interview he shares his fascination with Chinese culture, because he too is new to it.

Qeelin Chinese luxury jewellery brand symbols 2019
@qeelin.com

 

qeelin.com
Qeelin industrial designer and artistic director Dennis Chan; @qeelin.com

It was in the city of Dunhuang, Gobi desert that Dennis Chan had a premonition of Qeelin’s identity. Much inspired by the statues of 1000 years old. He wanted to bring it back. He imagined “a jewellery brand that would pay tribute to Chinese culture, its expertise and heritage: a brand that would surely remind the west of its tropism for the far east in the time of Marco Polo, perpetuating centuries of cultural exchanges”.

That is the spirit that inspired him to found Qeelin, which, backed by Kering, has developed a substantial retail presence, operating nearly 40 mono-brand stores, mostly across Asia, the USA and France including shop-in-shops, and present now in the new boutique on Place Vendôme, commemorating the brand’s fifteenth anniversary.

Unlike TTF’s Artistic Director Harry Wu who is from Mainland China and created his brand as a fusion of both French and Chinese designers and craftsmen, Chan has a distance from both mainland and France, having perhaps more of a British mentality designing very strategically but always with a smile. Qeelin creates exquisite jewellery intended for daily wear that is meaningful, contemporary, and universal. It aims to bring a touch of playfulness and surprise into the world of fine jewellery. “HAHA” represents “happiness” (playfulness) and “harmony”, expressed through the amiable nature of the panda, a Chinese icon in itself.

The brand is now shifting from accessible jewellery upwards for the Cannes film festival and downwards towards greater accessibility. Chan’s latest hobby is rap and hip-hop music. The freedom in hip-hop is visually expressed through Chan’s sartorial style and the playful styling of his fine jewellery on men and women. Chan currently composes and produces music for fun – but fans are awaiting yet another breakthrough in his career when he brings his musical insights into his jewellery designs. This may be the right way for Qeelin to extend its appeal to Westerners. Let’s wait and see.

 

Philippe Mihailovich and Caroline Taylor are luxury brand consultants at HAUTeLUXE and Visiting Professors of Luxury Brand Management at leading business, fashion and jewellery schools in both Paris and China. They are also Paris representatives and contributors to 2LUXURY2.com.

Sandra Ma featuring Place Vendome Limited edition
Sandra Ma featuring Qeelin Place Vendome Limited edition; @qeelin.com
Qeelin Tien Di collection is neither circle nor square., celebrating harmony and everlasting love
Qeelin Tien Di collection is neither circle nor square., celebrating harmony and everlasting love; @qeelin.com
Qeelin Chinese luxury jewellery brand portfolio 2019-
@qeelin.com
Qeelin Chinese luxury jewellery brand 2019-02
@qeelin.com
Qeelin Chinese luxury jewellery brand portfolio 2019- Panda
@qeelin.com
Qeelin Chinese luxury jewellery brand 2019-03
@qeelin.com
Qeelin Chinese luxury jewellery brand campaign 2019
Sandra Ma for @qeelin.com
Qeelin Chinese luxury jewellery brand 2019-01
@qeelin.com

Anna Hu, the ‘haute’ jewellery maestro of the 21st Century

 

 
by Philippe Mihailovich & Caroline Taylor

 

Paris Haute Couture Fashion Week is also the time for the big Haute Joaillerie talents to present their high creations to the world on the prestigious Place Vendôme – the place to be for the finest jewellery names in the world.

2019 Anna Hu in front of Musée du Louvre, Paris
Anna Hu in front of Musée du Louvre, Paris; @Anna Hu

The Ritz Hotel always hosts many of the world’s leading foreign designers, some just for the fashion week whilst others are present at the Ritz all year round. Anna Hu, the world’s most expensive jewellery artist, does both – a permanent window at The Ritz and a striking showroom exhibition during this unique event.

For connoisseurs of high jewellery, it’s one of those rare chances not only to meet Anna directly but also to enjoy the experience of touching and wearing some of her Million Dollar creations. Of course, it’s all about the stunning contemporary pieces that this ex-cellist has created under the exhilarating influence of classical music rather than her world-record price tags. One can truly feel and almost hear the music by simply looking at the creations, even if only in her books!

Hu is certainly not ‘just another female Asian jewellery artist creating more butterflies with more diamonds and more jadeite’. Considering that this Taiwanese New Yorker’s family name ‘HU’ actually means ‘butterfly’, one can well expect her to produce at least one butterfly collection but whatever she creates is always a few steps ahead and a higher challenge combined with a sophistication beyond what has been done before. Hu seems to well on her way to setting the new standards of high jewellery for the 21st Century, always with a deep meaning attached to each and every creation.

Unlike some master jewellers who have felt compelled to create fake brand stories based on an animal, insect, flower or a love story, Anna is a living legend with a real story, a real passion, a real universe that flows out of her just as a symphony flows out of a great composer. She does not design ballerinas to try to devise a brand symbol for herself or to appeal to those who frequent the opera houses of the world. The ballerinas are there because Anna is there. The music is in her soul and in her blood. It’s part of her life as much as it is part of the lives of ballerinas. They are raised in opera houses and it shows in the delicate dancers that we can almost feel moving, enhanced by a gorgeous mix of coloured stones give endless motion to their tutus – far superior to the stiff mini-statues that one tends to see from the established jewellery houses.

ANNA HU Siren's Aria Ring in Aquamarine-side
ANNA HU Siren’s Aria Ring in Aquamarine-side; @ANNA HU

Hu’s ‘brand universe’ is just as authentic and organic as that of the world’s great master artists and maestro composers. Her universe is herself, her philosophies, her authentic emotions, her genuine love for music and her true artistic talents.

Unlike the houses who employ marketing advisors to ‘position’ their brands or hire ad agencies to develop their brand identities, Anna’s world has developed naturally through her passions. Her work has been appreciated by the best museums, the big jewellery collectors, the leading luxury experts and magazines worldwide and must be making both the marketing and the ‘design directors’ of the big houses weep with envy.

Most of the big brand names in the luxury jewellery sector do not seem to have achieved much since the days gone by when they were acknowledged with great awards and royal clients from a few hundred years ago, whereas at the age of 35, Anna presented her first global exhibition at the Louvre’s Musée des Arts Décoratifs (MAD) in Paris along with her first book aptly entitled, “Symphony of Jewels, Opus 1”. Hu’s sense of colour, structure, form, a mix of stones and movement leaves one wondering what took the museum so long to host her.

One year later she broke two world auction records at Christie’s Magnificent Jewels’ sale in Geneva. First, the world auction sales record for a contemporary jewellery artist – an accolade previously held by JAR (Joel Arthur Rosenthal, also known as the ‘phantom of the Place Vendôme due to his secrecy and avoidance of the public eye). Second, the highest auction price per carat for a Burmese sapphire. She then went on to break the world auction record for a Chinese contemporary jewellery artist with the $2.59 million sale of her Orpheus Jade Ring at the Christie’s Hong Kong “Magnificent Jewels” sale.

At the Ritz, Hu presented her « Silk Road Music Collection » “I have always been so fascinated by the culture from Silk Road, the most ancient route in the world. As I would like this collection to speak to my Chinese roots, I decided to base my new creations on the traditional yet exotic Silk Road music.” The collection includes five pieces of jewels, each delicately crafted in Paris by the most exquisitely skilled artisans.

Among the five creations is the “Dunhuang Pipa Necklace”, with a jaw-dropping 100.02-carat fancy intense yellow diamond, inspired by the beautiful Chinese instrument, pipa as well as the Dunhuang Mogao grottoes. Since Sui-Tang times, the Mogao Grottoes have symbolized the starting point of the Silk Road. This necklace can also be transformed into a brooch and a pair of earrings, offering the wearer more versatility in choosing their jewels.

ANNA HU Jadeite Cello Brooch
ANNA HU Jadeite Cello Brooch; @ANNA HU

As can be heard in the video interview, Anna projects her passion for music onto her creations. To Anna, jewellery designs are like musical creations, and in her works, a song’s melodic beauty can always be felt. Her “Jadeite Cello Brooch” takes inspiration from Picasso’s “Violin Hanging on the Wall”, located in Switzerland’s Museum of Fine Arts Bern (Kunstmuseum Bern).

The “Blue Magpie Brooch” calls on the Jesuit missionary and painter at the imperial court of China – Giuseppe Castiglione for inspiration as well as an antique Blue-and-White Flower-Bird-Motif Circle-Squared Plate from the National Museum of History. Anna used coloured gemstones to translate the two blue magpies and flowers from the forests resulting in a combination of Chinese aesthetics and Western aristocracy.

ANNA HU Ellington Earrings
ANNA HU Ellington Earrings; @ANNA HU

The “Ellington Earrings”, a tribute to Duke Ellington, incorporate piano keys, the shape of harps and the flow of melody. Designed with blue sapphire, baguette-cut and modified cut diamonds, this unique piece glitters on its titanium set. In the middle, conch pearls represent the notes, perfectly interpreting classical jazz in the most elegant style. It is, however, not clear how the creation is linked to the silk road.

Likewise for the lovely “Appassionata Ring in Ruby” – a combination of piano keys and the silhouettes of harps. The classic baguette-cut and modified cut diamonds create the uniqueness of this precious piece combined with rare rubies along with round brilliant cut diamonds glitter on its platinum set. The design perfectly interprets classical jazz. The ring covers three fingers in an elegant way. The emerald cut rubies in the middle embody the black keys on the piano.

ANNA HU Rachmaninov Bracelet 2
ANNA HU Rachmaninov Bracelet II; @ANNA HU

 

Other than the « Silk Road Music Collection », Anna Hu presented nine other recent creations including the “Rachmaninov Bracelet” which is discussed in the video. Each piece individually represents HU’s ongoing enthusiasm for music, culture, and nature, bringing the audience an eye-opening experience in jewellery art.

At the brand’s cocktail reception, Pascal Morand, Executive President of the Fédération de la Haute Couture et de la Mode officially announced Hu as a member of the Paris Haute Couture Committee. Anna Hu is now officially the first Asian female member of the Committee. Her jewellery has been worn by style-influencers and celebrities such as Madonna, Gwyneth Paltrow, Natalie Portman, Scarlett Johansson, Drew Barrymore, Hilary Swank, Oprah Winfrey, the acclaimed contemporary artist Cindy Sherman, and Jetsun Pema, the queen consort of Bhutan.

Hu and her jewels have been featured in The Wall Street Journal, W, ELLE, The New York Times, InStyle, Robb Report, Vanity Fair UK, Vogue Gioiello, Wall Street Journal Europe and leading Chinese publications including South China Morning Post, Harper’s Bazaar, Vogue, ELLE, L’oficiel, InStyle, Marie Claire, and many others.

 

Philippe Mihailovich and Caroline Taylor are luxury brand consultants at HAUTeLUXE and Visiting Professors of Luxury Brand Management at leading business, fashion and jewellery schools in both Paris and China. They are also Paris representatives and contributors to 2luxury2.com.

ANNA HU Siren's Aria Earrings in Aquamarine
ANNA HU Siren’s Aria Earrings in Aquamarine; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Rachmaninov Bracelet 4
ANNA HU Rachmaninov Bracelet IV @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Rachmaninov Bracelet 1
ANNA HU Rachmaninov Bracelet I; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Zircon
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Zircon; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Ruby - side
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Ruby; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Ruby - front
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Ruby – front; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Blue Magpie Brooch
ANNA HU Blue Magpie Brooch; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Butterfly Rose Ring in Emerald_side
ANNA HU Butterfly Rose Ring in Emerald_side; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Enchanted Orchid Ring in Blue Sapphire
ANNA HU Enchanted Orchid Ring in Blue Sapphire; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Enchanted Orchid Ring in Jade
ANNA HU Enchanted Orchid Ring in Jade; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Rubellite
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Rubellite; @Anna Hu

 

Lorenz Bäumer: The Jewellery Prince of the Place Vendôme – or ‘the enfant terrible?’,

 

Article & video interview by Philippe Mihailovich.

Paris’ Place Vendôme with its 28 private ‘hotel particuliers’ – little palace/manor houses- is not only perhaps the most prestigious place to live in the city but has certainly been the best Parisian address for any high jewellery house to be since the opening of the Ritz hotel in 1898 at number 15. The Kering-owned House of Boucheron became the first Haute Joaillerie Maison to open its doors opposite the Ritz in 1893 under its jeweller-founder, Frédéric Boucheron.

Today the Place Vendôme consists mostly of corporate-owned maisons and almost no living founder jewellers behind them other than the highly respected American-born Lorenz Bäumer and the secretive Joel Arthur Rosenthal. Given the dangers of the profession, one can well understand the need to be secretive.

Lorenz Baumer x SAS La Princesse Charlene de Monaco
Lorenz Baumer x SAS La Princesse Charlene de Monaco; photos: lorenzbaumer.com

For many years, the young Bäumer – whom Forbes France dubbed Le Petit Prince De La Haute Joaillerie (The Little Prince of High Jewellery) (1) -had a studio at no.4 Place Vendôme that not just anyone could visit. His name was built by word-of-mouth only, yet it led to Bäumer being invited to create the outstanding collection that was to herald Chanel’s incredibly successful entry into high jewellery on the opening of its boutique at no.18. The impact of his innovative creations shook the Place Vendôme down to its very foundations causing the major houses to rush out to recruit artistic directors and return to innovating again.

Chanel eventually opened their very own fine jewellery workshop located above their boutique in 2013, just as Louis Vuitton was announcing that it too was entering into high jewellery and would be based at no.23. Vuitton had employed Lorenz Bäumer as their artistic director – the chosen one who could give the famous French luxury house legitimacy in this field.

It took 20 years at Chanel Joaillerie and 10 years at Louis Vuitton before Bäumer would set out to focus on his own maison. He had already succeeded in having four exceptional pieces being bought for the permanent collection of France’s top jewellery Museum, the Musée Des Arts Décoratifs, Paris thus raising his name to the level of Francois Kramer, one of the best jewellers that France has ever produced, and had been named an Officier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Ministry of Culture in 2012, a very high honour to receive in France. Not only that, he had beaten all the famous houses on the Place Vendôme in a blind competition to design an exceptional tiara for the much televised wedding of Her Serene Highness The Princess of Monaco. The House of Monaco had historically appointed Van Cleef & Arpels for Princess Grace’s tiara.

Until now, it has been almost impossible to meet Lorenz Bäumer himself but 2018 marks the year that he has reached out by being the only young creator to be shown at the prestigious Biennale in Paris (2) and perhaps one the few French high jewellery houses to show at the prestigious PAD (the Pavillion of Art & Design) in London. The difference to many of the jewellery designers of today is that Bäumer is not only a designer and a visionary, he’s a trained engineer and brings his scientific knowledge into the field of haute jaoillerie to achieve creations that the mainstream luxury houses cannot even imagine. What’s more is that he is alive and well and clients can meet him directly, including some visitors to his boutique who have wandered in without appointments.

Fleurs olfactives uniques - Lorenz Bäumer
Fleurs olfactives uniques by Lorenz Bäumer; photos: lorenzbaumer.com

Bäumer understands that the Place Vendôme can be intimidating for many and is doing whatever he can to revolutionise the welcoming process by making an effort to meet those who visit and by showing a total transparency. He is happy to present his incredible transformable pieces and explain where every stunning stone comes from, where his inspirations came from, the hidden stories in his creations, his love of surfing and nature, his interpretations of poems, fruits, vegetables and of course, mineralogy. He is even openly showing prices on the website and is considering the same for his windows – very shocking for the Place Vendôme!

Bäumer is happy to receive millennials and to assist in transmitting knowledge to them and even personalising creations for them whether it be through 3D hidden messages in pieces, some in morse code or tattooed diamonds, or daguerreotyped timepieces with ‘me-lennial selfie’ images on their faces. With an average of 250 pieces per year, we are not speaking about industrially-produced goods that can be found everywhere. Every piece is considered to be meaningful.

Perhaps more surprising for some, is his invitation to clients to compare selected Japanese whiskies with Scottish ones whilst pairing them with famous chef, Alain Ducasse’s delicious chocolates! Perhaps that is why some of his favourite gemstones have colours that remind us of whisky or the sea. What remains a secret surprise is that he has created a signature perfume – presumably with his perfumer friend Francis Kurkdjian – that is not for sale but only offered as a gift to his clients. Any link to the aromas of chocolates, whisky, stone colours or surfing?

Let there be no doubt about it, Lorenz Bäumer has well earned his reputation as ‘The Little Prince of High Jewellery’ but he is disrupting the old order nevertheless, and to the old guard he certainly is the ‘enfant terrible’ that just won’t go away. Who knows, it may get worse. He could well become the Cartier of tomorrow!

(1) https://www.forbes.fr/luxe/lorenz-baumer-le-petit-prince-de-la-haute-joaillerie-cree-des-chefs-doeuvre-pour-dire-je-taime/?cn-reloaded=1
(2) https://www.2luxury2.com/who-are-the-true-high-jewelry-talents-of-today-the-2016-biennale-des-antiquaires-in-paris/

Lorenz Baumer at PAD London 2018
Lorenz Baumer at PAD London 2018; photos: lorenzbaumer.com; .facebook.com/lorenzbaumerparis
Fleurs olfactives uniques - Lorenz Bäumer - Olfactium Collection presents unique and innovative flower rings
Fleurs olfactives uniques – Lorenz Bäumer – Olfactium Collection; photos: lorenzbaumer.com
Tiare Ecume de Diamants - Lorenz Bäumer The Jewellery Prince of the Place Vendôme – or ‘the enfant terrible
Tiare Ecume de Diamants by Lorenz Bäumer; photos: lorenzbaumer.com
SCARABEE D'ETE - Lorenz Bäumer The Jewellery Prince of the Place Vendôme – or ‘the enfant terrible
SCARABEE D’ETE by Lorenz Bäumer ; photos: lorenzbaumer.com
REFLET RIVIERE - Lorenz Bäumer The Jewellery Prince of the Place Vendôme – or ‘the enfant terrible
REFLET RIVIERE ring by Lorenz Bäumer; photos: lorenzbaumer.com
RAYONNEMENT 2018- Lorenz Bäumer The Jewellery Prince of the Place Vendôme – or ‘the enfant terrible
RAYONNEMENT 2018 by Lorenz Bäumer; photos: lorenzbaumer.com
RAYONNEMENT - Lorenz Bäumer The Jewellery Prince of the Place Vendôme – or ‘the enfant terrible
RAYONNEMENT by Lorenz Bäumer; photos: lorenzbaumer.com
NEBULEUSE - Lorenz Bäumer The Jewellery Prince of the Place Vendôme – or ‘the enfant terrible
NEBULEUSE by Lorenz Bäumer ; photos: lorenzbaumer.com
METEORITES - Lorenz Bäumer The Jewellery Prince of the Place Vendôme – or ‘the enfant terrible
METEORITES by Lorenz Bäumer; photos: lorenzbaumer
FLEUR DE NUIT - Lorenz Bäumer The Jewellery Prince of the Place Vendôme – or ‘the enfant terrible
FLEUR DE NUIT by Lorenz Bäumer; photos: lorenzbaumer.com
LIGHT PAINTING - Lorenz Bäumer The Jewellery Prince of the Place Vendôme – or ‘the enfant terrible
LIGHT PAINTING; photos: lorenzbaumer.com
METEORITE DIAMANT - Lorenz Bäumer The Jewellery Prince of the Place Vendôme – or ‘the enfant terrible
METEORITE DIAMANT by Lorenz Bäumer; photos: lorenzbaumer.com
ETINCELLES - Lorenz Bäumer The Jewellery Prince of the Place Vendôme – or ‘the enfant terrible
ETINCELLES by Lorenz Bäumer; photos: lorenzbaumer.com
BO OP'ART - Lorenz Bäumer The Jewellery Prince of the Place Vendôme – or ‘the enfant terrible
OP’ART by Lorenz Bäumer; photos: lorenzbaumer.com

 

Kei’s Art of Conceptualising Emotions as Haute Fashion

by Philippe Mihailovich

The recent Spring / Summer Haute Couture fashion week in Paris was once again surprised by what was being shown in Paris’ secretive avant –garde Some/Things magazine showroom space.

kei kagami shoes photos -kei kagami retrospective shoe exhibition at Selfridges
Kei Kagami Retrospective Shoe Exhibition at Selfridges; Photos by Andy Tommo .

 

Strange architectural handmade shoes of lead and leather with protruding cones and wings that could be from another planet of the future or the past combined are discreetly exhibited to compliment the equally unusual haute fashion creations. One cannot quite use the classical term ‘haute couture’ for these unusual pieces made from an eclectic mix of wonderful fabrics and improbable materials. Functional, playful and conceptual whilst also being both timeless and fashionable. Some dresses are able to transform from a space creature outfit to that of a business power-woman at a zip.

The talent behind these innovations is, of course, London-based Japanese designer-artist-architect Kei Kagami. After having completed his degree in architecture and working for Japan’s iconic architect, Kenzo Tange, Kei found himself wanting to fashion space around the body. He enrolled at Tokyo’s Bunka Fashion College, then London’s Central St Martins where he pipped Alexandra McQueen to the top spot. After a few years under John Galliano, Kei began his own creative label, more for creative liberty than for commerce. As such he has had his works displayed in some of the leading museums and galleries across the world including:

National museum of Scotland (work purchased for the permanent collection), Kunst Haus Wien museum “shoeting stars” (Austria), Kunsthal Rotterdam museum ” S.H.O.E.S ” (Holland ), Rooms / retrospective shoe exhibition (Tokyo), Arnhem mode biennale (Holland), Grassi museum Leipzig (Germany), Netherlands leather shoe museum / retrospective shoe exhibition (Holland), FIT museum / shoe obsession (New York) and the list goes on and on, yet he remains humble and philosophical – see video interview.

kei kagami conceptual pieces - industrial revolution 2003 , photo by andy tommo-
Kei Kagami Conceptual Pieces – “Industrial revolution”, 2003/ Photos by Andy Tommo.
kei kagami retrospective at Selfridges Photos by Andy Tommo
Kei Kagami Retrospective at Selfridges. Photos by Andy Tommo.

It is very rare in our times to come across a designer who is more interested in the creative process than celebrity. Perhaps he has been fortunate enough to have been commissioned by YKK (a world leader in fastening products) to make a collection of zip-inspired pieces. The results of this collaboration were outstanding, no one had seen anything quite like it before. YKK then began sponsoring Kei Kagami’s catwalk shows for London Fashion Week and Milan. He has since designed the first YKK showroom in London, and through YKK, Kei has become actively involved in graduate competitions (for example ITS#ACCESSORIES) and educational initiatives with some of the most prestigious colleges on the planet. (RCA, Hogeschool Antwepren, Shenkar College & Esmod Paris).

The wonderful thing about Paris is that it is here where respect is earned for creativity rather than turnover. The French are always on the lookout for the next visionary not the next rag trade millionaire. In Paris we make a distinction between a ‘creator’ and a ‘designer’ or ‘stylist’. Kei Kagami has already made his lasting contribution to the advancement of design creation. Let’s hope that the French will finally give him the recognition he deserves.

kei kagami - part one GIFT collaboration with Karlmond Tang , 2016
Kei Kagami – “Part one GIFT”, collaboration with Karlmond Tang , 2016.
kei kagami retrospective at Selfridges Photos by Andy Tommo
kei kagami retrospective at Selfridges Photos by Andy Tommo
KEI Kagami anatomy 2 - 2016 photo by Karlmond Tang
Kei Kagami Anatomy 2, 2016; photo by Karlmond Tang
kei kagami conceptual pieces - water dress at Arnhem mode biennale 2009, photo by Ernst Moritz
kei kagami conceptual pieces – water dress at Arnhem mode biennale 2009, photo by Ernst Moritz
kei kagami conceptual pieces - zip dress 2 2011 -Photos by Andy Tommo
kei kagami conceptual pieces – Zip Dress 2 2011;Photos by Andy Tommo
kei kagami conceptual pieces - anatomy 2007 photo by Tigi International
Kei Kagami conceptual pieces. Anatomy 2007 Photo by Tigi International
kei kagami conceptual pieces- correction 2005 , 2 photo by andy tommo
kei kagami conceptual pieces- correction 2005 , 2 photo by andy tommo
kei kagami conceptual pieces - water dress at Arnhem mode biennale 2009
kei kagami conceptual pieces -“water dress” at Arnhem Mode Biennale 2009
kei kagami conceptual pieces- photo by andy tommo
kei kagami conceptual pieces- photo by andy tommo
kei kagami conceptual pieces -U-boat at some things , 2011
kei kagami conceptual pieces -U-boat at some things , 2011
kei kagami conceptual pieces - industrial revolution 2003 , photo by andy tommo
kei kagami conceptual pieces – industrial revolution 2003 , photo by andy tommo
kei kagami conceptual pieces -water cress skirt 2007 Spring Summer
kei kagami conceptual pieces -water cress skirt, Spring / Summer 2007
kei kagami conceptual pieces-part one GIFT collaboration with Karlmond Tang , 2016
kei kagami conceptual pieces-part one GIFT collaboration with Karlmond Tang , 2016
kei kagami conceptual pieces
kei kagami conceptual pieces
kei kagami shoes photos - kei kagami retrospective at Selfridges Photos by Andy Tommo
kei kagami retrospective at Selfridges; Photos by Andy Tommo
kei kagami shoes photos - kei kagami retrospective at Selfridges- Photos by Andy Tommo
kei kagami retrospective at Selfridges- Photos by Andy Tommo
kei kagami shoes photos -kei kagami retrospective shoe exhibition at Selfridges-Photos by Andy Tommo-
kei kagami retrospective shoe exhibition at Selfridges-Photos by Andy Tommo
kei kagami shoes photos -kei kagami retrospective at Selfridges-Photos by Andy Tommo
kei kagami retrospective at Selfridges-Photos by Andy Tommo

kei kagami conceptual pieces - Autumn Winter 2007- 2008 kei kagami conceptual pieces - industrial revolution 2003 - photos by andy tommo kei kagami conceptual pieces - Spring Summer 2007 kei kagami conceptual pieces - photos kei kagami shoes photos -kei kagami retrospective Selfridges-Photos by Andy Tommo- kei kagami shoes photos -kei kagami retrospective shoe exhibition at Selfridges-Photos by Andy Tommo kei kagami shoes photos -kei kagami retrospective at Selfridges- Photos by Andy Tommo kei kagami shoes photos - kei kagami retrospective Selfridges Photos by Andy Tommo

French Fine Jewellery that is Impossible to Copy

By Philippe Mihailovich & Caroline Taylor.

maison auclert - French Fine Jewellery that is Impossible to Copy 2luxury2-bracelet

Discreetly tucked away between the famous high jewellery boutiques of Paris’ famous Place Vendôme and the Tuileries gardens on rue Castiglione lies a discreet little fine jewellery boutique that offers pieces that will never be found elsewhere.

Considering Marc Auclert’s appreciation for antiquities, descending from a Parisian family with deep roots in the field, few would have expected that one day, this talented young man would be daring to purchase rare museum-quality antiques and convert them into strange whimsical pieces of fine jewellery.

Of course, when one understands that he had spent 15 years at Chanel helping the house to stretch from perfume and high fashion into the complex field of high jewellery in premises on the Place Vendôme right between ancient haute joaillerie masters Chaumet and the less ancient Van Cleef & Arpels. We all remember how the established houses mocked this move and predicted its failure. In fact, the result was quite the opposite and every fine jewellery maison had to rise to the challenge of a new high creativity and reduce their logo pieces almost overnight.

Chanel not only brought out gorgeous unusual and bold creations but was also seen to have invented the concept of every piece having a strong story, as has always been the case in fine art.

maison auclert - French Fine Jewellery that is Impossible to Copy 2luxury2 ring

As if this was not daring enough, Auclert joined Sotheby’s to help in the creation of a Sotheby’s Diamonds division to allow that maison to sell wonderful pieces directly to their well-heeled clients. It comes as no surprise then to find Marc Auclert soon being hired by diamond specialist, de Beers (under LVMH) to head up their highly successful Japanese division and charged with opening Taiwan and even China as well as other neighbouring territories and after three years, at the ripe age of 45, came to realise that corporate life was not for him, and opened up his ‘own little company’.

With this rich background, one can see how his concept includes what he has learned as a grandson, gemmologist, employee as well as the contacts that he has made in antiquities and jewellery. In his work, one can see the high jewellery skills from the workshops he met when at Chanel. “You cannot be successful if your supplier is not successful”, they told him at Chanel,“so don’t try to squash them down, treat them well, elevate them because they will be your source of success”. In the video interview, one can see how much Auclert enjoys the freedom to create and one can feel the passion for each of his pieces.

We can also understand why Auclert would not even think of making the same kind of jewellery that the more mainstream luxury houses produce. We can understand why he attracts the educated wealthy and we can understand why ‘old money’ appreciates him and his creations. The creations will never be accessible to everyone everywhere. Marc Auclert stands as a good example of the rise in demand for independent high jewellery creators by those ‘in the know’, who are connoisseur enough to appreciate his work. Watch the exclusive Interview with Marc Auclert of Maison Auclert High Jewellery, Paris.

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JOHN RUBEL – Since before 1915. The World’s first Independent High Jewellery Heritage Brand?

“A brand exists first and foremost in the mind of the consumer. It may live as long as it is remembered. The logic of brand revival or recyclability is that some brands are buried in consumers’ psyches and as such may still have value. These ‘dormant’ brands are more likely to gain readier acceptance by consumers than would a totally new brand, and at a much lower cost…capitalising on an established heritage…” (1) Mihailovich & de Chernatony.

Article and  exclusive video interview by Philippe Mihailovich  – HAUTeLUXE.net & Caroline Taylor

john rubel-jewrly vogue-magazine -

The awakening of dormant luxury brands is now a new phenomenon but it has always been more common for investment funds to seek such names in fashion e.g. Vionnet, Jacques Fath. Many, such as Worth, Jean Patou, Chanel, Balenciaga were kept alive primarily due to their perfume businesses. LVMH billionaire Bernard Arnaud bought the luxury luggage ‘sleeping beauty’ in 2010 and is slowly expanding the maison across the world after 30 years of ‘sleep’. Britain’s Penhaligon’s ‘barber’ perfumery too was brought back to life after over 30 years of silence and has proved a big success.

The John Rubel story is quite different. First born in Budapest as Rubel Aba and relocated to Paris’ rue Vivienne in 1915, the Rubel brothers soon established themselves as one of the most extraordinary craftsmen. They almost instantly became a preferred workshop, alongside the Verger brothers for the prestigious Van Cleef & Arpels who would exhibit at High Jewellery fairs in Paris and New York proudly displaying the names Rubel Frères and Verger alongside their own (2).

Bleu Carmen - Or gris, diamants saphirs- John Rubel Jewelry - 2luxury2

SophieMizrahi Rubel NB-John Rubel Jewelry President - Heir- Artistic Director

In those days, the houses of Cartier, Chaumet, Boucheron and others on the Place Vendôme did not all have well defined brand DNA codes and were very open to workshops offering them creations. In fact, as Sophie Mizrahi-Rubel, President, heir and creative head of John Rubel explains, “the big houses did not have the strong identities that they have today”. As with the major jewellery houses in China, one could easily swap the signage of the houses around and we would be hard pressed to notice.

The concept of ‘Maison’, where the house controls everything from the beginning through to the end, with no sub-contracting, was something few houses were in a position to do. As such, the Rubel Brothers grew in fame alongside Van Cleef & Arpels and their shared favourite designer Maurice Duvalet and by 1939 they had agreed to move to New York with VCA where the new centre of gravity for jewellery had shifted.

Some of the most sought-after antique jewellery today would be the exceptional pieces bearing the both the names Rubel and VCA and if anything has kept the Rubel name far from being forgotten, it is the antique jewellery connoisseurs and leading auction houses of the world. By 1943, Sophie’s great uncles, Jean and Robert Rubel had opened their own ‘maison’, John Rubel in the prestigious 5th Avenue close to the Savoy- Plaza Hotel, a move that clearly brought their collaboration with VCA to an end.

John Rubel Jewelry - The World’s first Independent High Jewellery Heritage Brand

Did Sophie simply inherit the successful family business?

Sophie was born in France to a father who was a leading diamond dealer and a mother who specialised in precious gems. She was clearly born with jewellery in her veins and had been very inspired by all in the family to the extent that she already had the confidence as a student at University, to help modify bridal rings for friends and others. She later went on to study gemology and before long, was calling on houses on the Place Vendôme offering her sketches to VCA, Boucheron and the like, just as her great uncles had done, except that their business no longer existed.

Before long the famous houses were buying her designs and production of at least ten to twenty pieces – note that the houses did not have chains of stores worldwide at the time and internal creative directors planning the collections, by price point, in advance. Mizrahi-Rubel was then approached by LVMH’s Fred Jewellers to work for them full-time which she did for a number of years before joining Cartier and later Mauboussin. Unlike the fashion industry where Lagerfeld can work for Chanel, Fendi and his eponymous label, in high jewellery it viewed as a conflict of interest.

Ginger-Web ring by John Rubel - 2luxury2

With Mauboussin and chasing mass-market sales for a faster turnover growth, and other Place Vendôme houses opening retail outlets at the speed of mass-market brands, Sophie could see that connoisseurs at the high- end of the business were fast defecting to lesser-known independent jewellers, the field she loved so much.
It was time for her to once more design exceptional, rare and timeless pieces driven by creativity or by what the stone requires rather than in accordance with a marketing plan. It was time too, to resurrect the family brand and she had clearly earned the right to do so.

Unlike the ‘sleeping beauty’ luxury houses mentioned earlier, this one has the authenticity of having a true family member behind it. Perhaps only Fabergé comes close to sharing such a story and even won the Grand Prix d’Horlogerie de Genève award in 2015. Sophie Mizrahi-Rubel is certainly on track to be a Haute Joaillerie award-winner for house of John Rubel in the near future.

1. Mihailovic, P. and de Chernatony, L. ‘The Era of Brand Culling: Time for a Global Rethink’ The Journal of Brand Management, Volume 2, #5, April 1995, pp 308-315;

2. Jean Jacques Richard, “L’Histoire des Van Cleef et des Arpels” 2010.

john rubel-jewrly vogue-magazine - cover january-1945 John Rubel- Jolie Mo¦éme

John Rubel- Bleu Carmen bague- ring   John Rubel Jewelry -rockette The World’s first Independent High Jewellery Heritage Brand John Rubel - Mistinguett bague-ring John Rubel - Ginger saphir ring John Rubel - Ginger diamants ring John Rubel - Amelia - or rose 1-2016  John Rubel - Amelia - or gris 1